57 N.Y.S. 531 | N.Y. App. Div. | 1899
This was a reference of a disputed claim against the estate of a testator, and under the provisions of the Code becomes an action pending in the Supreme Court. • It is claimed that the remedy is not by reference, but is'by compelling an accounting before the surrogate and in support of the claim the respondents rely upon Shorter v. Mackey (13 App. Div. 20). We think that this case is not controlling of this question. That was a proceeding to compel one executor tó pay over moneys in his hands belonging to the estate of his testator. It was not an account or indebtedness which had accrued or which existed against the testator in his lifetime. It was, therefore, held that the remedy was by an accounting to compel the executor to account for and transfer the property of his testator. In the present case the claim is against the deceased, and the same became due and payable in his lifetime. While it is true that the indebtedness arose by virtue of his office as guardian, yet it is also true that it was a personal indebtedness for which his estate is liable for any sum which may be established as due and payable. It is, therefore, clearly within the provisions of section 2718 of the Code of Civil Procedure, and as such was referable.
In the present case the deceased received the moneys of his ward and invested them in real estate, taking title in his own name. That this was an improper investment of the trust funds may be conceded. It may also be conceded that he became liable to the plaintiff to account to her for the rents, issues and profits arising out of the investment, had the plaintiff elected to enforce the same when she became of age. She arrived at the age of twenty-one years in October, 1886, and the evidence tended to establish and the referee would have been authorized to find that thereafter, with full knowledge of all the circumstances, she acquiesced in the disposition which had been made of the trust funds, and with full knowledge established a course of dealing with respect thereto between herself
Nor do we find that the referee committed any error in his recep-. tian of testimony. The witness Mrs. Howitt was the mother of the plaintiff, and ■ inasmuch as she- confessed to taking-the book containing this account and subsequently delivering it to the plaintiff, it was quite proper upon cross-examination to call her attention to the circumstances connected with her retention of the book and the delivery of it to her daughter, and while some of the questions which
We find no legal error which calls for á reversal of this judgment, but on the contrary we think that the -conclusion reached by the referee was in all respects just and is supported by the testijmony.
It follows, therefore, that .the judgment should be affirmed.'
All concurred.
Judgment affirmed,- with costs.